Process for making chewing gum and product



flavoring agent.

United States Patent PROCESS FOR MAKING CHEWING GUIVI AND PRODUCT Harold Rosenthal, Newtonville, Franklin Kramer, Lexington, Ernst Albert Steigmaun, Stoneham, and Arthur F. Tole, Melrose, Mass., assignors to General Foods Corporation, White Plains, N.Y., a corporation of Delaware No Drawing. Application August 15, 1956 Serial No. 604,089

13 Claims. (Cl. 99-135) This invention relates to an improved flavoring composition particularly adapted for use in chewing gum and to a process for preparing the same. More particularly it relates to a chewing gum having a flavor which is controllably released over an extended period of time and to a process for preparing the same.

Chewing gum may comprise a substantially water insoluble, chewable, plastic gum base such as chicle, or substitutes therefor, including jelutong, guttakay, rubber, or certain comestible natural or synthetic resins or waxes. Incorporated with the gum base, and in intimate admixture therewith, may be plasticizers or softening agents, e.g. glycerine; volatile, water-immiscible flavoring agents e.g. oil of Wintergreen, oil of Spearmint, oil of peppermint, licorice, fruit flavors, spice oils, etc.; or sweetening agents which may be sugars including sucrose or dextrose and/or they may be artificial sweeteners such as cyclamates or saccharin. Other optional ingredients may also be present.

It is found that when most flavored chewing gums, such as slab gums, are chewed, the initial perception of flavor appears after a minute or more at a low level, and after three or four minutes of chewing, the flavor intensity drops to an uninteresting low level. It is also found upon analysis that gum chewed for as long as 30 minutes may ultimately retain as much as 60% of the flavor initially present, and that this proportion of the flavoring agent is thus not effectively used.

It is an object of this invention to provide a flavoring composition, particularly adapted for use in chewing gum, which composition is characterized by an extended period of controlled flavor release. A second object of this invention is to increase the total amount of flavor released during the chewing period of gums containing the herein described flavoring composition. Other objects of this invention will be apparent to those skilled-inthe-art from the following detailed description of the invention.

It has now been discovered that it is possible to obtain a flavoring composition, particularly adapted for use in chewing gum which permits attainment of a product characterized by extended flavor perception time, true flavor character, and release of a large proportion of This flavoring composition comprises finely divided particles of a tunnel-dried hardened gelatin emulsion containing discrete micro-droplets of a volatile, water-immiscible flavoring agent. Preparation of the flavoring composition of, this invention may be effected by encapsulating discrete micro-droplets of volatile, water-immiscible flavoring agent within finely divided particles of tunnel-dried emulsion of hardened gelatin.

Unhardened gelatins which, when hardened, may be "ice to use gelatins having a Bloom of 20 to 80, preferably 50. The pH of a typical unhardened gelatin which may be employed may be 4 to 10.

Hardening of the unhardened gelatins to attain the desired degree of hardness preferred in connection with the process of this invention may be accomplished by either physical or chemical means. Typical of the physical techniques which may be employed is exposureof a dried gelatin emulsion to heat, preferably at temperature sufficiently low to minimize loss of flavor by volatilization. Hardening by heat treatment may be effected for example by placing the gelatin (preferably in particle form) containing the flavoring agent in an autoclave for 30 minutes at 5 p.s.i.g. and 110 C.

When the gelatin is to be hardened by chemical treatment, this may be effected by treatment of the gelatin either in sol form or in gel form with treating agents including those hereinafter noted. Certain agents, e.g. diacetyl, may be used in gas phase to contact the solidified gelatin. Preferably however, the hardening agent will be added to the gelatin solution before the same is dried.

Chemical hardening agents which may be employed may be those embraced within the following groups:

I. Aromatic hardening agents, including (a) anionic (b) amphoteric, and (c) cationic;

II. Aliphatic hardening agents;

III. Resin-type hardening agents;

IV. Carbonyl-type hardening agents;

V. Mineral hardening agents;

VI. Salting-out agents;

VII. Gelatin modifying agents.

GROUP I I. (a) Aromatic hardenersanionic materials within this group may include natural tanning agents e.g. quebracho, sumach, or tannic acid; sulfonated organic compounds e.g. including lignin sulfonic acid or polyaryl sulfonamides (typically available under the trade name Tannigan Supra LL); phenols (preferably when freshly precipitated by acids from their phenates in presence of the gelatin to be hardened) e.g. p-chlorometacresol or methyl salicylate (the latter preferably in colloidal form following precipitation from its phenate); or condensation products typified by the phenolsulfonic acid-formaldehyde condensation product.

I. (b) Amphoteric materials within this group may include phenol-formaldehyde-amine condensation products such as those obtained by a Mannich condensation between resorcinol, formaldehyde, and an aliphatic base. A typical material of this nature may have a structural formula as follows: r

where R is preferably an aliphatic residue, e.g. CH or a gelatin residue.

I. (c) Cationic materials within this group may include resins such as aniline-formaldehyde resins which may have been heat treated at e.g. C. and then diazotized and coupled to azo dyes.

GROUP H Aliphatic hardeners within this group may include epoxy-type compounds including diepoxides or epichlorhydrin; paraflin sulfochlorides; and alkyl sulfates or sulfonates including wetting agents such as dodecyl sulfonate (the latter typically available under the trade name Duponol C).

hardening process, the

3 GROUP III Resin hardeners within this group may include formaldehyde-type resins such as the dicyandiamide-formaldehyde resins, urea-formaldehyde condensation products, melamine-formaldehyde condensation products, and diisocyanates e.g. hexamethylene-diisocyanate, the latter preferably unpolymerized or only very slightly polymerized.

GROUP IV Carbonyl hardeners within this group may include aldehydes and ketones e.g. quinones. Preferred among the members of this group are formaldehyde or formaldehyde-releasing agents including hexamethylene tetramine. Other effective aldehyde hardeners include alkyl homologues of formaldehyde including acetaldehyde, propionaldehyde, butyraldehyde, etc., preferably in alkaline solution; hydroxy-aldehydes, e.g. glycol aldehyde, aldol, glyceric aldehyde, and alpha hydroxy adipaldehyde; dialdehydes, e.g. glyoxal methylglyoxal, p-glyoxal, and mesoxydialdehyde; unsaturated aliphatic aldehydes e.g. acrolein, dibromacrolein, and crotonic aldehyde; carboxylic aldehydes including glyoxylic acid, etc.; aromatic aldehydes including salicylic aldehydes and resorcylic aldehyde; and methylene citric acid.

Typical of suitable ketones which may be employed are acetol, fructose, alpha diketones, e.g. diacetal (which forms xyloquinone above pH 7) quinones, or 1,4-diketones e.g. acetonyl acetone.

GROUP V GROUP VI be used are typified by Typical of these is so- Salting-out agents which may citrates, sulfates, and glycine. dium sulfate.

GROUP VII Included within this group are gelatin modifying agents which may be employed to produce modified gelatins e.g. the phenate, alkylsulfate, polyacrylate, polysilicate, polystyrenesulfonate, or the chitosan hydrochloride of gelatin as well as acylated and sulfonylated gelatins including benzene sulfonyl gelatin (which is soluble at pH above the isoelectric point and insoluble at or below the isoelectric point).

Hardening of gelatin to eflect the desired results of this invention may preferably be done while the gelatin is in solution. Typically hardening may be accomplished by forming a solution of 15% to 50%, preferably 40% of gelatin in water and treating this solution with hardening agent in the amount of 0.5% to preferably 1% by weight of gelatin present. When hexamethylene tetramine is the hardening agent, it will be used in amount of 0.5 %5 preferably 1% by weight of gelatin; when acetaldehyde is the hardening agent, it will be used in amount of 0.l%l%; and when formaldehyde (in 37% aqueous solution) is employed, it will be used in amount of 0.05% to 0.5%. Hardening occurs during a period of minutes to 30 minutes, preferably minutes at temperature of 100 F. to 120 F., preferably 110 F. Agitation may be provided during the hardening process.

When the gelatin to be hardened is in solution, as is the case in the preferred procedure, hardening is conducted to a point just short of precipitation i.e. if more hardening agent were added, the gelatin would be hardened to the point where it is insoluble. During the molecules of gelatin may become cross-linked, the molecular weight and viscosity increase, and the rate of solubility of the gelatin decreases.

The hardened gelatin may be designated generally by the term gelatin-hardening agent and specifically by a name which indicates the particular hardening agent employed, e.g. gelatin-hexamethylene tetramine. This designation does not necessarily imply that any particular compound is formed during hardening, nor does it imply that the hardening agent so-designated is necessarily found as such in the hardened gelatin.

Prior to the solidification or drying of the gelatin solution and preferably before hardening but after cooling the same to F. to 140 F., preferably 110 F., the desired volatile, water-immiscible flavoring agent may be added to the solution to form an emulsion which may then be homogenized. Typically the flavoring materials which may be employed include oil of peppermint, oil of spearmint, fruit essences, licorice, spice oils and the like. The selected flavoring material may be added in amount of 10% to 50%, preferably 33% by weight of the gelatin.

When the emulsion of flavoring agent in gelatin solution is solidified as by cooling and subsequent drying, the resultant slab-dried or tunnel-dried emulsion flavoring composition has the flavoring agent distributed therewithin in the form of discrete micro-droplets. The solid tunnel-dried emulsion will be reduced to powder form which may typically be 20 mesh to 400 mesh, preferably 40 mesh. The resultant flavoring composition comprises particles of tunnel-dried hardened gelatin distributed within each of which is a volatile, water-immiscible flavoring agent in the form of discrete micro-droplets. The flavoring composition thus comprises flavoring agent encapsulated or locked within solid hardened gelatin. Typically the flavoring composition may contain 50% to 90%, preferably 67% of hardened gelatin, and 10% to 50%, preferably 33% of volatile, water-insoluble flavoring agent.

Compounding of a flavored chewing gum may be effected by admixing the hardened gelatin-encapsulated flavoring composition in amount of 3% to 30%, preferably 15%, with the gum base in amount of 70% to 97%, preferably by weight. Mixing may be effected by suitable mechanical mixing procedures for time suflicient to produce a uniform mixture.

Physically the resulting chewing gum product may include an all-enveloping mass of gum base such as chicle, within which is substantially uniformly distributed particles of hardened gelatin-encapsulated flavor. Although the mixing procedure followed may result in transfer of some of the flavoring agent from the hardened gelatin encapsulation to the gum, substantially all of the flavoring agent which was admitted will still be found in the hardened gelatin-encapsulation after mixing. Other ingredients including sweetening agents, coloring agents, etc. may also be present in desired amount.

It is a characteristic feature of this chewing gum product composition that it retains its flavor under conditions of vigorous chewing for extended periods which may be double that of compositions heretofore known. For example, under certain conditions, the flavor perception time may be six minutes or longer, in contrast to the usual three minutes which is the flavor perception time of products heretofore known to those skilled-inthe-art.

The chewing gum product is also characterized by high degree of flavor release. It may retain as little as 30%35% of the flavor originally present after chewing for 30 minutes. Gums heretofore available, when chewed for the same time, are found to retain as much as 60% or more of the flavor originally present.

The following specific examples will serve to illustrate certain preferred embodiments of this invention:

Example 1 According to a specific example of the process of this invention,- 40 parts byweight of 50 Bloom gelatin were added to 60 parts by weight of water at temperature of 40 F. The mixture was agitated and heated to 140 F.

emulsion which formed was chilled and tunnel-dried with circulating air at room temperature.

100 parts by weight of chicle were admixed with 18 parts by weight of the above-prepared hardened gelatinencapsulated flavor and the mixture blended until homogeneous.

Testing of the product chewing gum indicated that it had a substantially high flavor release. Perceptible flavor was apparent during chewing over a period of 9 minutes. Flavor retention was 35% after 30 minutes.

Example II According to a specific example of the process of this invention, 40 parts by weight of 50 Bloom gelatin were added to 60 parts by weight of water at temperature of 40 F. The pH was adjusted to 9 by addition of caustic soda solution. The mixture was agitated and heated to 140 F. until the gelatin completely dissolved and then the solution was cooled to 120 F. 20 parts by weight of methyl salicylate (oil of Wintergreen) was added to the solution which was homogenized to form an emulsion.

0.75 part by weight of acetaldehyde was added to the homogenized emulsion, and the mixture was maintained at 110 F. for 20 minutes. The resulting emulsion which formed was chilled and tunnel-dried with circulating air at room temperature.

100 parts by weight of chicle were admixed with 18 parts by weight of the above-prepared hardened gelatinencapsulated flavor and the mixture blended until homogeneons.

Testing of this product chewing gum indicated that it was characterized by low flavor retention and by an extended period of flavor release.

Example III According to a specific example of the process of this invention, 40 parts by weight of 50 Bloom gelatin were added to 60 parts by weight of water at temperature of 40 F. The pH was adjusted to 9 by addition of caustic soda solution. The mixture was agitated and heated to 140 F. until the gelatin completely dissolved and then the solution was cooled to 120 F. 20 parts by weight of methyl salicylate (oil of Wintergreen) was added to the solution which was homogenized to form an emulsion.

0.3 part by weight of formaldehyde was added to the homogenized emulsion, and the mixture was maintained at 110 F. for 20 minutes. The resulting emulsion which formed was chilled and tunnel-dried with circulating air at room temperature.

100 parts by weight of chicle were admixed with 18 parts by weight of the above-prepared hardened gelatinencapsulated flavor and the mixture blended until homogeneous.

Testing of this product chewing gum indicated that it was characterized by low flavor retention and by an extended period of flavor release.

A typical product prepared according to this invention may have the following composition:

A taste test was made to compare a chewing gum product ofthis invention with a standard chewing gum containing the same total amount of flavor in unfixed form. During the tests, 0.5 x 0.75 x 0.0625 inch slabs of each gum were separately chewed and the following were noted: time and intensity of initial flavor perception, extent of flavor burst, duration of interesting flavor level, and approximate total time during which flavor was available. In these tests, the rating of flavor intensity was measured by the person chewing, on a scale ranging from 0 to 10, the level of 1 indicating threshold flavor intensity just discernible to the taste, and a level of 10 indicating a maximum intensity above which the sensation originating in the flavor is unpleasant.

The commercially available standard containing unfixed flavor in chicle was characterized by initial indication of flavor at a level of 1 after about 7-8 seconds. Intensity rose to 3 at about 15 seconds, and thereafter at a slower rate to a level of 6 at about 60 seconds. At this point, flavor intensity dropped oif to 3 after about seconds. At about 2 minutes, the flavor intensity was at the uninteresting low level of 1.5. After 4 minutes of chewing, the flavor had dropped below the threshold value of 1, and the standard gum was flat and lifeless.

Initial flavor liberation in a sample prepared according to this invention occurred at level of 1 after 5 seconds. Intensity continuously rose to a high of about 10 after 90 seconds. It remained at this level until about 3 minutes when it dropped ofi slightly. After 4 minutes,

it was at level of 7.5 which was higher than that reached Time Standard Example I 6 Seconds 7 Seconds- 10 Seconds i 15 Seconds. 20 Seconds. 30 Seconds- 45 Seconds. 60 Seconds.

9 Minutes It is apparent to the person making the chewing test that the chewing gum product of this invention is superior to the sample containing the same amount of flavoring oil in unfixed form. Specifically the product of this invention is characterized by an extended flavor perception time, a true flavor character which is substantially that of the flavoring agent, and a high degree of flavor release.

The term encapsulate as herein employed with reference to the relation of the hardened gelatin and the flavoring agent means that the latter is distributed substantially homogeneously within a solid mass of the former. The flavoring agent is locked in within the hardened gelatin to the extent that the former is released substantially only as the hardened gelatin is dissolved from the surface of the individual hardened gelatin particles by the action of salivary liquids.

Although the specific examples herein described show certain details of our invention including, for example, specific techniques according to which gelatin may be hardened, it will be apparent to those skilled-in-the-art that there are other techniques for hardening gelatin which may be employed in connectionwith this invention and that various modifications and changes may be made which come within the scope of this invention.

What is claimed is:

1. A chewing gum which comprises a plurality of 20 mesh to 400 mesh particles of tunnel-dried emulsion of hardened gelatin, discrete micro-droplets of a volatile, water-immiscible flavoring agent within each of said particles, and an all-enveloping mass of a chewable gum base within which the particles are substantially uni- Eormly distributed.

2. A chewing gum which comprises a plurality of particles of a tunnel-dried emulsion of hardened gelatinhardening agent, discrete micro-droplets of a volatile, water-immiscible flavoring agent within each of said particles, and an all-enveloping mass of a chewable gum base within which the particles are substantially uniformly distributed.

3. A chewing gum as claimed in claim 2 wherein said hardening agent is a carbonyl-type hardening agent.

4. A chewing gum as claimed in claim 2 wherein said hardening agent is a formaldehyde-releasing agent.

5. A chewing gum as claimed in claim 2 wherein said hardening agent is hexamethylene tetramine.

6. A chewing gum as claimed in claim 2 wherein said hardening agent is a gelatin modifying agent.

7. A chewing gum as claimed in claim 2 wherein said hardening agent is a gelatin salting-out agent.

8. A chewing gum as claimed in claim 2 wherein said hardening agent is a mineral type hardening agent.

9. A chewing gum as claimed in claim 2 wherein said hardening agent is an aliphatic type hardening agent.

10. The method of preparing a chewing gum which comprises forming a gelatin solution, hardening said gel- 8 atin, tunnel-drying said hardened gelatin, adding a vola tile water-immiscible flavoring agent to said gelatin before the same is tunnel-dried whereby the flavoring agent is encapsulated within the gelatin, and substantially uniformly distributing the said tunnel-dried emulsion of hardened gelatin containing the encapsulated flavor with in an all-enveloping mass of a chewable gum base.

11. The method of preparing a chewing gum which comprises forming a gelatin solution, adding thereto a volatile water-immiscible flavoring agent thereby forming an emulsion, hardening said gelatin emulsion, tunnel drying said emulsion thereby formingra solid dried emul sion of flavor in gelatin, and substantially uniformly distributing said dried emulsion within an all-enveloping mass of a chewable 'gum base.

,12. A chewing gum which comprises a plurality of particles of tunnel-dried emulsion of hardened gelatin, discrete micro-droplets of a volatile, water-immiscible flavoring agent within each of said particles, and an allenveloping mass of a chewable gum base.

13. A chewing gum which comprises a plurality of particles of tunnel-dried emulsion of hardened low Bloom gelatin, discrete micro-droplets of a volatile, water-immiscible flavoring agent Within each of said particles, and an all-enveloping mass of a chewable gum base.

References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 748,708 Dunham Jan. 5, 1904 1,526,039 Arkell etal. Feb. 10, 1925 2,369,847 Olsen et al. Feb. 20, 1945 2,680,075 Landau June 1, 1954 

2. A CHEWING GUM WHICH COMPRISES A PLURALITY OF PARTICLES OF A TUNNEL-DRIED EMULSION OF HARDENED GELATINHARDENING AGENT, DISCRETE MICRO-DROPLETS OF A VOLATILE, WATER-IMMISCIBLE FLAVORING AGENT WITHIN EACH OF SAID PARTICLES, AND AN ALL-ENVELOPING MASS OF A CHEWABLE GUM BASE WITHIN WHICH THE PARTICLES ARE SUBSTANTIALLY UNIFORMLY DISTRIBUTED. 